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Anyone you can think of.
Remember, she is not meaning anything she says. My Dad has Dementia and told me infront of 20 people that I was not his daughter. I knew that wasn't my Dad talking; that was the Dementia. You have to have a thick skin.
Also, if your mom could; she wouldn't want to have this disease.
DON'T TAKE IT PERSONALLY! Remember the good times.
God Bless You!!!!
Tell the AL facility to text you if it is important.
If you see her getting mean, set boundaries--tell her you want to visit and talk to her, but if she's going to be mean, you will leave, then do it. If she is just scared during these episodes, soothe her as best you can. Distract her, bring her pictures that you can talk about. If she says she wants to go home, talk about the good ol' days when she was at home with you, cooking, baking, etc. As someone mentioned above, take her for a walk if possible (I know you said she was on hospice, so might not be able to), and lastly, if all of this doesn't help her agitation, you might want to talk to the hospice staff, as well as the nursing staff, about maybe getting something in a low dose to calm her down (Ativan, etc.). If she is on hospice and at the end of her life, these continued agitated episodes without relief is not good for her quality of life, and she should definitely have that at this time.
Good luck.